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In Moore Park, A Modern Home With a Curiously Pitched Roof

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A contemporary home on a quiet street makes a pitch perfect statement

In architecture as in life, it’s hard to stand out from the crowd while fitting seamlessly in. Architect Drew Mandel’s design for a Moore Park residence accomplishes that feat and then some. His clients, a couple with a young son, liked the neighbourhood for its leafy quietude, but wanted a 21st-century home. That meant tearing down and rebuilding – a novel proposition on a street replete with ’20s houses, the kind with peaked roofs and mazes of dark rooms and shallow basements. Mandel’s creation plays with that form but imbues it with openness and light.

Modern design meets traditional charm with a pitched roof - Drew Mandel Architects home design toronto

Modern design meets traditional charm with a pitched roof that blends seamlessly into Moore Park’s leafy streets, filling the house with light and openness.

He began by designing a flat-roofed, unabashedly modern space – an aesthetic for which he’s known and one of the reasons the clients chose him. But just as he had conceptualized the design, the city introduced a new zoning bylaw that limited flat-roofed homes to two storeys, while gabled structures could still have three. Rather than contest the city’s decision or remove the third floor, Mandel embraced the challenge and incorporated a modern pitched roof into the design of the house.

modern home design toronto

The peaked roof translates to a cathedral ceiling upstairs. Pillowcases from Made; lamp from Hollace Cluny; painting by Jay Hodgins from Art Interiors; bed from Urban Mode. Photo by Naomi Finlay.

Happily, the constraint didn’t diminish the modernity of the 390-square-metre three-bedroom home; rather, it resulted in one of its most remarkable features – the master bedroom. Directly beneath the peak, and bookended by two outdoor terraces, a cathedral ceiling runs east-west. Here, Mandel included a series of clerestory windows, so the interior partitions that separate the otherwise open-concept en suite, dressing room and sleeping space wouldn’t have to reach to the ceiling. Not only does the glass allow for a stronger reading of the architecture, it draws light through the entire area.

Pitched Roof - Drew Mandel Architects - modern home design toronto

A 3.5-metre-deep slot at the back of the house draws sunshine into the basement. At night, the cast concrete wall’s inset luminaries illuminate the light well. Photo by Ben Rahn /A-Frame.

Constraint resulted in another of the home’s achievements – the basement. “The clients didn’t want a lower level at all,” Mandel says. They viewed subterranean spaces as dark, dank and dreary. He tried to accommodate their wishes, but since they asked for a home office, media room, gym and wine cellar he realized he’d have to build a fourth floor. Building this above grade was not an option, and so the puzzle would have to be solved with a light-filled lower level.

Light-filled three-storey light well illuminating the basement, first floor, and mezzanine - Drew Mandel design toronto

A three-storey light well bathes the basement, first floor and second-level mezzanine with southern rays. Rug from Avenue Road; chair from Hollace Cluny. Photo by Ben Rahn /A-Frame.

Mandel dug out the basement, making it as lofty and airy as possible by cutting out a notch from the back of the house for a deep, wide light well, which he lined with texture-rich, board-form concrete. The slice allows for floor-to ceiling windows underground, illuminating the den and an adjacent yoga studio. The lighting is spectacular. It washes down the concrete wall, not only making the rooms feels larger but sublimely distinguishing the house from its earth bound neighbours – without overpowering them. drewmandelarchitects.com

Originally published in our Fall 2014 issue as Piqued Interest.

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A new development series by Collecdev Markee and Batay-Csorba Architects reimagines Toronto’s housing with purpose-built rentals

Like many North American cities, Toronto is in the midst of a housing crisis. With high living costs, limited affordable supply, and an ever-growing population, finding a place to live has become increasingly difficult if not impossible. While single-family homes and high-rise condo units abound, other housing types—like duplexes, triplexes, and low- to mid-rise apartment buildings—are few and far between. But there does seem to be some hope on the horizon as the city has begun to change its zoning bylaws to accommodate and expedite the building of these exact “missing middle” typologies.

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